“…Over the past decade, evidence to support the efficacy and acceptability of physiotherapy care delivered via telehealth has been growing (Kumar et al., 2022; Seron et al., 2021; Suso‐Martí et al., 2021; Zischke et al., 2021). Although telehealth may encompass care delivered via wearable devices and virtual reality and other technologies (Suso‐Martí et al., 2021), most physiotherapy research to date has focussed on real‐time (synchronous) consultations between a physiotherapist and a patient via telephone or videoconferencing as this reflects how most telehealth‐delivered physiotherapy care occurs in practice (Bennell et al., 2021; Cottrell & Russell, 2020; Hasani et al., 2021; Wong et al., 2020). Research suggests that physiotherapy care delivered via telehealth is effective within a variety of patient populations, including, for example, patients with osteoarthritis (Azma et al., 2018; Bennell et al., 2017, 2022; Hinman et al., 2020), non‐specific low back pain (Dario et al., 2017; Dario & Simic, 2021), hip replacements (Pastora‐Bernal et al., 2017) and other musculoskeletal conditions such as patellofemoral joint pain (Albornoz‐Cabello et al., 2021), as well as for patients requiring rehabilitation following knee arthroplasty (Jiang et al., 2018; Shukla et al., 2017) or shoulder surgery (Eriksson et al., 2009; Kane et al., 2020) or for pulmonary conditions (Michaelchuk et al., 2022).…”